*<do name="Marconi Wireless Interpretation Centre" alt="" address="Pickett's Road Extension, Fogo" directions="" phone="" url="" hours="" price="" lat="49° 43' 10.47 N" long="54° 15' 47.06 W">Perched high on the hill above the community of Fogo, get a great view of the community and learn about the early communications history of Fogo Island.</do>

*<do name="Marconi Wireless Interpretation Centre" alt="" address="Pickett's Road Extension, Fogo" directions="" phone="" url="" hours="" price="" lat="49° 43' 10.47 N" long="54° 15' 47.06 W">Perched high on the hill above the community of Fogo, get a great view of the community and learn about the early communications history of Fogo Island.</do>

*<eat name="Nicole's Cafe" alt="" address="159 Main Road, Joe Batt's Arm" directions="" phone="1 (709) 658-3663" url="http://www.nicolescafe.ca" hours="" price="" lat="" long="">Drawing from our food traditions and using local ingredients, Nicole’s menus bring together the best of our land and our ocean in a creative mix of modern and traditional recipes.</eat>

*<eat name="Nicole's Cafe" alt="" address="159 Main Road, Joe Batt's Arm" directions="" phone="1 (709) 658-3663" url="http://www.nicolescafe.ca" hours="" price="" lat="" long="">Drawing from our food traditions and using local ingredients, Nicole’s menus bring together the best of our land and our ocean in a creative mix of modern and traditional recipes.</eat>

*<sleep name="Fogo Island Inn" alt="" address="Fogo Island" directions="" phone="1 (709) 658-3444" url="http://www.fogoislandinn.ca/" hours="" price="" lat="" long="">A cultural destination in its own right where visitors and locals meet, the Inn includes an art gallery, heritage library, cinema and rooftop sauna. Each of the 29 guest rooms is unique, with every detail chosen with purpose and handcrafted by locals. Opening November 2012.</sleep>

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*<sleep name="Fogo Island Inn" alt="" address="Fogo Island" directions="" phone="1 (709) 658-3444" url="http://www.fogoislandinn.ca/" checkin="" checkout="" price="" lat="" long="" hours="">A cultural destination in its own right where visitors and locals meet, the Inn includes an art gallery, heritage library, cinema and rooftop sauna. Each of the 29 guest rooms is unique, with every detail chosen with purpose and handcrafted by locals. Opening March 2013.</sleep>

When hiking, be prepared for unpredictable weather and strong winds. Do not stand too close to the edge of cliffs in such weather. In addition, stick to marked trails and know what to do when encountering wild animals such as caribou.

When hiking, be prepared for unpredictable weather and strong winds. Do not stand too close to the edge of cliffs in such weather. In addition, stick to marked trails and know what to do when encountering wild animals such as caribou.

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==Get out==

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Revision as of 15:52, 10 December 2012

Fogo Island and Change Islands lie off the northeast coast of the island of Newfoundland, Canada.

They are comprised of what's called outport communities. If you’re in Newfoundland, this is how you’ll hear the small coastal settlements referred to. They’re not towns, or hamlets or villages; they are, in the unique language that has developed in this place over the centuries, outports.

Fogo Island and Change Islands

Some 2400 people live on Fogo Island and 250 people live on Change Islands.

Little Fogo Islands is described by some as the “cultural homeland of Fogo Islanders,” and were once inhabited year-round by fishermen and their families who lived here in order to remain closer to the fishing grounds on which their livelihood depended. The archipelago lies approximately 5 miles from Fogo Island and is comprised of over 100 tiny islands. Little Fogo Islands are no longer settled.

Understand

Brimstone Head, Fogo Island

The isolation from the mainland; the intimate and profound entanglement with the sea and the forces of nature; lives lived at the very edge of a great ocean have created a place of many stories.

It is not surprising that the Flat Earth Society considers Fogo Island one of the four corners of a flat earth.

Endangered Rural Communities

Fogo Island and Change Islands were among the earliest settlements in Canada. They are populated by a people descended from immigrants from the west country of England and Ireland. They have always sustained themselves from the resources of the sea and have developed a vibrant culture based on deeply rooted connections to place and community. Located in the Labrador Current, the Northeast Coast of Newfoundland is the only place in the world where people live in moving ice – as the Arctic pack ice and icebergs are brought to their shores by the south flowing current. To live here is to have an indomitable spirit, a deep understanding of the full community of life, of the give and take of living with the sea and no small sense of humour.

People settled on Fogo Island and Change Islands, like most of Newfoundland, to fish for cod. Cod has sustained people in this place for centuries. In 1992, the government imposed a moratorium and the cod fishery was closed. The upheaval throughout rural Newfoundland was devastating with hundreds of small rural communities – outports – losing their livelihoods almost overnight.

Tilting Harbour

Fogo Island and Change Islands have fared better than many other remote fishing communities that have not survived the 1992 moratorium on the cod fishery. Many of the fishermen of Fogo Island have adapted their fishery to other species such as crab and shrimp.

It is a sad reality that many fishing communities are ‘too far gone’ to save. This is not the case with Fogo Island and Change Islands. While the islands suffer from high unemployment, the out-migration of youth and the lack of many of the social and health facilities that most Canadians take for granted, there is no poverty of aspirations. Far from it.

Get in

The closest airport for visiting Fogo Island and Change Islands is Gander International Airport in Newfoundland and Labrador.

From Gander, you must get to the community of Farewell on Route 235, the Road to the Isles scenic driving route. There is a ferry service that takes approximately 25 minutes from Farewell to Change Islands, and 50 minutes from from Farewell to Fogo Island.

The Fogo Island ferry schedule can be found on the Newfoundland and Labrador government website.

See

Contemporary Architecture

Fogo Island is a place of stunning beauty and the setting for an exciting
sociological and economic experiment in which architecture, as a vital component within the fabrication of culture and the identity of a place, plays a central role.

Location of Fogo Island Artist Studios

Six remote sites scattered across Fogo Island were chosen by Fogo Island Arts to host studios for artists and writers in residence. The studios range in size from two hundred square feet to twelve hundred square feet (twenty to two hundred square meters). The siting of the studios on a series of locations around Fogo Island, allows the artists to live within the various communities and interact, on a daily basis, with the local residents.

In all six studios, the intent was to sample and allude to local construction techniques: the spruce wood shell that cites the clapboard of the “outports”, or local fishermen’s houses; the stilt construction of Newfoundland’s waterfront fishing sheds; the proportions of the volumes and skewed frames, particularly in the case of the smaller studios.

All six studios are one hundred per cent off the grid with no connection to public services. All the studios follow the same model in
which the studio is paired with a Saltbox – a traditional Newfoundland house, where the artist's abides when not fixated on his/ her most recent art project. The restoration of the traditional Saltbox house and the
new construction of the architecturally provocative studios has created an interesting dynamic that brings the local vernacular architecture face-to-face with the multi-faceted expressions of contemporary culture.

Long Studio

Fogo Island Long Studio

Located near the community of Joe Batt's Arm, the Long Studio is an elongated and slightly distorted box that measures just over one hundred feet in length and about eighteen feet in width. Although this solitary, off-the grid building is firmly grounded by a concrete foundation at its western end, the twelve hundred square foot studio gradually takes flight, as it begins to hover on a series of stilts that lifts the structure above the ground to frame a view of the North Atlantic Ocean that periodically includes icebergs that originate from the glaciers of Greenland.

The project's robust architectural character certainly resonates with the sensibility of this place. It has a duel character as a viewing device that frames the landscape, the sea or a cloud overhead, as well as, an introverted place of repose for the artistic soul – a well-insulated industrial object designed to weather any storm.

Saunders has carefully choreographed a sequence of events that responds to the seasons, given the studios will be used spring, summer and fall. It begins with a covered exterior entry area that provides a degree of shelter from the rain and wind. This entry zone then mutates into an exposed exterior patio, a notch in an otherwise uninterrupted black box, that faces south to capture the sun. The last zone is a fully enclosed, insulated workspace, designed to filter light and direct views.

Upon entering the studio's interior, one is immediately struck by the drama of an elongated space that is further delineated by the horizontal lines of the white pine planks and flat countertops of the kitchenette and work area. A large triangular skylight, screened by the exposed timber framing below it, provides ample top lighting that reduces the need for extensive electrical lighting (and larger arrays of photovoltaic panels) and provides full color rendition for the work produced by the visiting artists and designers.

The Long Studio terminates with a large glass window that hovers above the
horizon – a lookout to watch the weather move throughout the day and season. As a hollow structure, that filters its environment, one can imagine, in the dead of night, the whistling of the high winds that ride the North Atlantic, or the slight taste of the salt, as the studio's operable windows are opened and the space is vented with the ocean breeze on a warm afternoon in July.

Squish Studio

Fogo Island Squish Studio at Night

The Squish Studio is located just outside the small town of Tilting on the eastern end of Fogo Island. The Squish Studio's white angular form, sited on a rocky strip of coastline, that could rival Italy's western coast, offers sharp contrast to the traditional vernacular architecture of the nearby picturesque community of Tilting. As its architect, Todd
Saunders, has commented on the studio's siting, "...it is out of sight, but close."

The approach to the front entry of the studio is dramatic, as the most southern end of the studio rises twenty feet above the ground, in sharp contrast to its most northern tip that measures only half that dimension. The
compact, trapezium-shaped plan of the studio is augmented by the extension of the east and west exterior walls to create a sheltered, triangulated south entry deck and a north terrace that overlooks the ocean. From a distant view, the streamlined form of the Squish Studio becomes apparent with its high back and low (squished) front designed, in part, to deflect the winds from the stormy North Atlantic.

Inside the studio, the spatial compression of the tall and narrow entry area gives way to the horizontal expanse of the main room. The downward angled roof leads the eye to the full height oblong glass window focused on
a splendid view of Round Head. The vertical white planks that line the interior walls are interrupted by a playful series of narrow windows integrated with an expanse of built-in cabinetry.

The Squish Studio, like most of its other counterparts, is equipped with a compost toilet, a small kitchenette and wood-burning stove. Power is supplied by stand-alone solar panels, mounted on an adjacent
hilltop. Both the interior and exterior of the studio, including the roof, is clad with spruce planks that are painted white. At night, the studio, illuminated by the soft glow of its solar-powered lighting, appears as a lantern or a lighthouse placed strategically on a rocky cliff to overlook the North Atlantic.

In its isolation, one can also imagine a sole occupant, vulnerable but protected from the elements – inspired to work late into the night, occasionally distracted by the crash of the waves, or perhaps, fully immersed in the work at hand, the first glimpse of the sunrise through the Squish Studio's slot windows that face the north-eastern horizon.

Bridge Studio

Fogo Island Bridge Studio

The trek to the Bridge Studio from the Deep
Bay House looks short on a map. Of course, on the ground is a different matter as the topography enters the equation and one navigates the rocky landscape of the lichen clad granite outcroppings on this sublimely beautiful stretch of coastline leading to Bridge Studio.

Along the winding path one encounters short runs of wooden stairs and ramps, installed in critical locations to help visitors ascend some of the trail's steeper inclines. After walking about twenty minutes, the first sign of the Bridge Studio is an isolated solar panel (and battery enclosure) mounted on a hilltop to take full advantage of the Island's limited sunshine. These solar cells generate electrical power for the near-by studio, dramatically located on a steep hillside overlooking the calm waters of an inland pond.

The first impression of the Bridge Studio is it's abstract quality. From the side elevation, it appears as a windowless wood-clad parallelogram, hovering above the landscape, propped up by four piers and connected by a sixteen-foot bridge to the adjacent hillside. As one approaches the three hundred and twenty square foot studio, it becomes more transparent – with a generous glass entry and a large square window at the other end of the room.

Viewed from the glass entry, the ceiling from the entry slopes up to the top of a large picture window at the opposite end of the room. The picture window's sill is flush with a built-in desk, the perfect place to
write and contemplate the view. To mirror the sloped ceiling, the floor of the Bridge Studio is composed of two levels. The lower area, that accommodates an entry area, long counter and wood-burning stove is
divided from the upper area by a short run of stairs. From the entry, the perspectival aspect of the project is augmented by alignment of the four-inch painted spruce planks that line the interior surfaces.

From the aerial photographs, the isolation of the Bridge Studio becomes apparent, a highly restrained, slightly distorted, elongated box sited on an outcropping of rock, overlooking a sheltered pond of water. The form, although resolutely contemporary recalls a traditional Newfoundland fishing stage (in the local nomenclature) a wooden vernacular building, typical of traditional buildings associated with the cod fishery in the province. It was in these fishing stages, equipped with cutting tables, that fishermen
would clean and salt the once plentiful codfish that was distributed worldwide.

It is an interesting twist that the Bridge Studio echoes this vernacular form, once a typical sighting in any Newfoundland outport. The fishing stage and the cod give way to the studio and the production of art.

Tower Studio

Fogo Island Tower Studio

The Tower Studio is dramatically situated on a stretch of rocky coastline in Shoal Bay. The studio's sculptural silhouette leans both forward and backward as it twists upward. There are no roads to the Tower Studio, it
can only be reached by hiking along the shore from the adjacent community or
walking on a narrow wooden boardwalk consisting of weathered planks that hover just slightly above a bog that features an abundance of cloudberries, known locally as bakeapples.

From a distance the wooden boardwalk reads like a tether strap, linking the stranded Tower Studio to the lifeline of a busy stretch of road. As one approaches the studio, its south-facing entry area is angled back thirty degrees. Overhead a triangulated section of wall leans forward to shelter the double glass doors below. Both the soffit and the angled entryway, clad in horizontal boards of spruce are stained white in sharp contrast to remainder of the building's windowless exterior of vertical plank siding painted slate black.

The Tower Studio is comprised of three levels with an overall height of thirty-two feet. Its entry area is equipped with a kitchenette, a compost toilet and woodburning fireplace. Its second level is a studio, day lit by a generous skylight that faces northward. A mezzanine overhead, juts into the double height volume of the studio.

Aside from the geometric complexity of the space, the second feature that adds to a sense of disorientation is the elimination of architectural detail and the fact that all vertical, horizontal and inclined surfaces, clad in smooth plywood, are painted a brilliant white. The only relief from the stark interior is a sliver of the exterior visible through the studio's sole
skylight. A slightly angled wall opposite and parallel to the skylight provides the perfect viewing surface upon which a body can recline and enjoy the view. One can imagine the magical effect of resting against this surface during a moonlit evening with the audible roar of the North Atlantic and force of the wind against the exposed surface of the tower.

From the studio level, a narrow ladder (also painted white) leads past the mezzanine level to the underside of a roof hatch. As one passes through the horizontal opening and stands on the roof-top deck, the view of the ocean and the rocky wind-swept terrain is spectacular.

The story of the Tower Studio is not complete without referencing two structures that support it. The first one is a 'standalone' array of solar panels situated about fifty feet to the west of the studio's main entrance. Because all the studios are located on isolated sites without access to
the utilities of electricity, water and sewer, they are equipped with photovoltaic panels, compost toilets and water cisterns.

Short Studio and Fogo Studio

The Short Studio and Fogo Studio, located in Little Seldom and the community of Fogo respectively, have been designed and will be completed in 2013.

Nature and Wildlife

Fogo Island and Change Islands offer the opportunity to see stunning natural wildlife and scenery. It is a regular occurrence to spot humpback whales, caribou herds, soaring seabirds, and towering icebergs.

Do

Bleak House Museum, North Shore Road, Fogo. Home to some of the most powerful and influential people in the history of Fogo, Bleak House represents the differences between the merchant class and the fishing class in the community from a century ago.(49° 43' 04.91 N,54°17' 06.07 W)

Brett House Museum, Brown's Point Road, Joe Batt's Arm. The Brett House and Outbuildings were beautifully constructed, and are exceptionally well-preserved. They were designated as Registered Heritage Structures on October 2, 2003, by the Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador.(49° 43' 46.48' N,10' 19.42 W)

Experience Fogo Site, North Shore Road, Fogo. Built on the old hospital grounds, view collections of old tools and see how Fogo Islanders grew their own vegetables, raised their livestock, mended their nets, and dried their fish. (49° 43 00.47 N,54° 17' 22.04 W)

Marconi Wireless Interpretation Centre, Pickett's Road Extension, Fogo. Perched high on the hill above the community of Fogo, get a great view of the community and learn about the early communications history of Fogo Island.(49° 43' 10.47 N,54° 15' 47.06 W)

Nicole's Cafe, 159 Main Road, Joe Batt's Arm, ☎1 (709) 658-3663, [5]. Drawing from our food traditions and using local ingredients, Nicole’s menus bring together the best of our land and our ocean in a creative mix of modern and traditional recipes.

Drink

Beaches Bar & Grill, 42 Main Street , Fogo, ☎1 (709) 266-7330.

Kenna's Pub, Main Highway, Fogo Island Central, ☎1 (709) 266-1230.

Sleep

Fogo Island Inn, Fogo Island, ☎1 (709) 658-3444, [6]. A cultural destination in its own right where visitors and locals meet, the Inn includes an art gallery, heritage library, cinema and rooftop sauna. Each of the 29 guest rooms is unique, with every detail chosen with purpose and handcrafted by locals. Opening March 2013.

Foley's Place B&B, Tilting, ☎1 (866) 658 7244, [7]. Visit and relax in a century-old home within walking distance of all tourist attractions. Come & enjoy the warm hospitality and experience our living heritage.

Contact

Stay safe

The communities of Fogo Island and Change Islands are known to be very safe - many people still leave their front doors unlocked at night. However, it is still recommended that travellers use common sense and their own discretion while staying on the island.

When hiking, be prepared for unpredictable weather and strong winds. Do not stand too close to the edge of cliffs in such weather. In addition, stick to marked trails and know what to do when encountering wild animals such as caribou.

This is a guide article. It has well developed information throughout the entire article, and throughout all of the articles on destinations within the region. Plunge forward and help us make it a star!